Thursday, February 21, 2013

This year, my one word focus is courage. It’s fine to have
such a focus. It’s great to want to obtain courage. It’s awesome when God
blesses you with it.

But let’s face it. Just because we want something and even
if God wants us to have it, that doesn’t mean we get it right now, right here,
just like we hope.

But that’s OK too, because it teaches us to wait on the Lord
and keep praying and keep working at what we know to do. It teaches us to
trust.

And it gives us an opportunity to let God use other people
to help with His work in our lives.

Have you ever been at a place in your life where darkness,
crisis, despair or worry has caused you to nearly shut down spiritually? When you didn’t know how to pray over a situation? Didn’t know even if you could pray?

In those times, we know one of the loving benefits of being
part of a community of believers. Remember Paul? He prayed for God’s churches
in all kinds of circumstances.

When we ask others for prayer, we know that we haven’t abandoned our faith; or that God has abandoned us.
Believers can cover us in prayer and can stand in the gap for us until we are
able once again to focus our prayer life and our faith in the direction God has
been all the while.

Courage is like that.

Sometimes we can find courage within ourselves to do what we
fear, to face what we feel incapable of facing, to mount up and accomplish the
un-accomplishable.

Other times, we miraculously set aside our own efforts and
ask God to work through us. And He does, accomplishing what we never thought
possible; doing through us what we felt unable to do on our own.

And folks, there are other times when we can gain courage
from others. Inspirational books can show us how other people have done things.
Flawed characters in scripture show us how God used even them to accomplish His
purpose. And we can rely on real-life, real-time courage from others in our
lives today.

If we have not the courage ourselves, we can borrow some
from others.

Do we not know how to do something we need to do? We can
rely on knowledge and expertise of others.

Do we not feel capable of doing something God is calling us
to do? We can rely on the truth of what others have done or the capabilities
they see in us that we are blind to.

When we gain knowledge, we are enlightened.

When we receive vitality, we are invigorated.

When we borrow courage, we become encouraged.

You've seen the power of encouragement in others. You can receive it yourself. It’s hard for some of us to ask for help. But encouragement we can accept. By understanding that encouragement comes in many forms: prayer, time, effort, words and actions—it makes it easier to borrow the courage we need so that we can remain encouraged until true courage is becomes a part of who we are.

PRAYER: Heavenly Father, thank you for the encouragement you send our way; either directly through your Holy Spirit, through examples in scripture and through people in our lives. Help us also be an encouragement to others in your name. Amen.

WHAT ABOUT YOU? Are you an encourager of others? Are you able to say or do
just the right thing at the right time to the right person to help them over a
hump or a slump in their lives?